Ars TechnicaEric Goldman • Published March 5, 2012 3:45 PM • Given the size and scale of its database, it's remarkable that we don't see more US defamation lawsuits filed (rather than just threatened) over Wikipedia entries. It's even more remarkable when you …

Ars TechnicaEric Goldman • Published March 5, 2012 3:45 PM • Given the size and scale of its database, it's remarkable that we don't see more US defamation lawsuits filed (rather than just threatened) over Wikipedia entries. It's even more remarkable when you …

This is an interesting topic. The article also mentions and links to some prior, similar cases.

It's certainly opinionated of the author of that piece, Eric Goldman, to say:

QUOTE

Clearly, these are relatively obscure pages. Any reputational impact of the alleged defamation was surely small.

...when he even calculated that probably hundreds of people viewed the pages while the defamation was in place. There are programs on television at this very moment that only hundreds of people are watching, anywhere in the world. Would such a television program's producers and broadcaster be immune from judgment if they said, "This is a relatively obscure TV show, any reputational impact of the alleged defamation was surely small"?

There are programs on television at this very moment that only hundreds of people are watching, anywhere in the world. Would such a television program's producers and broadcaster be immune from judgment if they said, "This is a relatively obscure TV show, any reputational impact of the alleged defamation was surely small"?

Unquestionably that would be a good argument for saying that any damages awarded should be modest.

No one has pointed out that this is a corp versus some editor -- Wikipedia is not a defendant, and is protected by the DMCA against this kind of thing. If people defame online, its on their head, not Wikipedias.

The "Hey nevermind we defamed you hardly anyone reads that stuff and at any rate it will be changed eventually anyway" defense.

Tuition is big business and the type of basement-dwellers that read Wikipedia are exactly the ones schools would love to scoop up, put in massive debt, and give them pieces of paper saying they're smart and deserve jobs or something. Damages could easily exceed $75,000. What's that, like 3 students?

No one has pointed out that this is a corp versus some editor -- Wikipedia is not a defendant, and is protected by the DMCA against this kind of thing. If people defame online, its on their head, not Wikipedias.

The Wikimedia Foundation is really pushing the limits on that, by claiming to be a factual reference work and marketing its product to schools.

Individual responsibility is good, but the way the Foundation acts is reckless and endangers the whole internet. The laws were meant to help get things done, not be a free pass for them to make money while making false claims and accepting zero responsibility for them.